What price Apple to buy Tesla in 2019? Denmark’s Saxo Bank thinks it knows. The forecast is second on the company’s just-released ten “outrageous predictions for 2019” list of “unlikely but underappreciated events which, if they were to occur, could send shockwaves across financial markets.”

Tesla would be worth $90 billion, at the $520-per-share price that fintech specialist Saxo is tipping it to be taken out at. That is 40% higher than Tesla’s current $64 billion stock market capitalization and $100-a-share more than the amount at which chief executive Elon Musk tweeted in August that he was considering taking the company private. Saxo says its rationale is that Apple will realize that if it wants to deepen its reach into the lives of its user base, “the next frontier is the automobile,” as cars become more digitally connected. Drawing comparison with how Apple’s late co-founder Steve Jobs liked to “bet big and bet wild to avoid complacency and irrelevance,” it adds: “Tesla needs more financial power and Apple needs to expand its ecosystem to the car in a more profound way than that represented by the current Apple CarPlay software.”

Far-Fetched?

If that sounds too far-fetched, just try some of Saxo’s other “outrageous predictions.” The bank reckons 2019 could be the year that President Trump fires Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell, Labour’s Jeremy Corbyn sends the pound and the dollar to parity by becoming U.K. prime minister in a snap general election and Germany enters recession. Its other forecasts include tips that the European Union will announce a debt jubilee and that a corporate credit crunch will see Netflix follow General Electric in losing further credibility in credit markets as investors panic over their liabilities. Saxo sees a credit crunch doubling Netflix’s funding costs, “slamming the brakes on content growth and gutting the share price,” while Disney’s 2019 entrance into the video streaming industry also acts to halt the movies giant’s Netflix growth.

Don’t Panic

If all this has you hovering over “sell” buttons, remember that these predictions do not constitute Saxo’s official market forecasts for 2019. The bank says they simply represent a “warning of a potential misallocation of risk among investors who typically see just a one percent likelihood of these events materializing.” Saxo Bank chief economist Steen Jakobsen thinks this year’s predictions have a unifying theme that “enough is enough."

“A world running on empty will have to wake up and start creating reforms, not because it wants to but because it has to,” he says. “The signs are everywhere. We think 2019 will mark a profound pivot away from this mentality as we are reaching the end of the road in piling on new debt and next year will see us all beginning to pay the piper for our errant ways. The great credit cycle is already showing signs of strain in late 2018 and will rip through developed markets next year as central banks are sent back to the drawing board.Their money printing efforts since 2008 have only dug a deeper debt hole, and it has now grown beyond their mandate to manage.”

Don’t panic. These are only predictions. But stranger things (just about) have happened. What are your own “outrageous predictions” for 2019?